Evaluation & Diagnosis
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As Thorough as it Gets
Endometriosis & Adenomyosis Evaluation Process
At Lotus Endometriosis Institute, evaluation starts with something simple that is often overlooked: we listen deeply to your story. The goal is not to just check boxes, but to uncover the true root cause of your pain or fertility challenges. This includes potentially diagnosing highly related conditions — which are often missed, ignored, or not even considered by other providers.
We listen, thoroughly
We start by learning about and hearing your full story — every symptom, flare pattern, and past treatment — so nothing important is overlooked. This is why the introductory materials and questionnaires we also send are extremely helpful. Using the written information in your own words and listening more than one time and usually by more than one provider, gives us the best chance to help you.
Root Cause Exploration
We conduct careful examination combined with diagnostic insight to distinguish endo from look-alike or coexisting conditions. Endometriosis can cause a lot of different and sometimes seemingly unrelated symptoms or findings, but it can’t and does not cause everything. Using clinical expertise, we dig into the details and apply a modern functional approach that produces actionable results.
Oncologic-Level Vigilance
We pay careful attention to rare but serious concerns such as pelvic masses or cancer risk in patients with long-standing or complex disease. This is combined with evaluation and discussion of any genetic factors than can strongly influence decisions and prognosis.
Targeted Advanced Imaging
Expertly interpreted MRI, ultrasound, or other imaging to identify suspected endometriosis and related pelvic conditions.
Microbiome & Gut Health Testing
When symptoms suggest, we assess for SIBO, leaky gut, and dysbiosis, which can amplify inflammation and pain.
Infection & Environmental Triggers
Selected patients may benefit from evaluation for Lyme disease, mold/mycotoxin exposure, or other chronic infections that worsen immune imbalance.
Immune & Hormonal Screening
We conduct testing for autoimmune overlap, thyroid dysfunction, PCOS, or adrenal imbalance that may complicate symptoms or fertility.
Pelvic Floor & Neurologic Assessment
Identifying pelvic floor dyssynergia, small fiber neuropathy, or central sensitization that contribute to chronic pain.
Vascular & Structural Conditions
Depending upon your symptoms, evaluation may include testing for pelvic venous congestion, May-Thurner Syndrome, and hernias that mimic or worsen endo pain.
Diagnosis
Our evaluation process is designed to be as thorough and comprehensive as possible, not only to look for signs of endometriosis, but to also address related conditions and ensure you receive truly complete care. These steps help us rule out look-alike issues, uncover contributing factors, and guide treatment planning with accuracy. That said, endometriosis cannot be 100% confirmed through imaging, lab work, blood tests, genetic testing, or any other non-surgical method. Because the disease develops within the pelvic cavity and organs, the only way to access the tissue, perform a biopsy, and provide an official diagnosis is through minimally invasive surgery.
Comprehensive Care
Endometriosis rarely exists in isolation, which is why we guide you through a holistic, whole-body evaluation. This includes conditions that mimic, worsen, or coexist with endometriosis — from gut dysbiosis and pelvic floor dysfunction to vascular issues, autoimmune overlap, or even rare but critical cancer risks. Validation through a correct diagnosis is always the first priority. Once we know what’s really happening, treatment can be tailored to your unique condition and goals — whether it be relief of daily pain, improving quality of life, or restoring fertility potential.
Your Care Continues
Pre & Post-operative Evaluation
In some cases, certain biomarkers can help evaluate endometriosis and may be elevated before surgery. Re-testing these markers after surgery to confirm improvement is part of our routine 3-month follow-up appointment (provided free of charge). If endometriomas were found and removed, follow-up ultrasound may also be recommended. For California patients, we can order these studies directly; for out-of-state patients, we provide guidance on what to request locally and review the results with you to ensure nothing is missed.
After Surgery & Beyond
Post-operative Testing
At Lotus Endometriosis Institute, the surgical intervention does not end when the procedure is complete. We go the extra mile by analyzing the tissues removed, looking for factors that may influence your long-term prognosis and guide tailored recommendations for additional therapies.
This may include:
Mitotic index testing – measuring how actively cells are dividing, which provides insight into the biological behavior of your endometriosis.
Tissue mast cell density – identifying the level of mast cell activity, which may explain heightened inflammation, pain sensitivity, and symptom severity.
Immune and molecular markers – when appropriate, we evaluate immune profiles or emerging biomarkers (such as cfmiR research applications) that can inform ongoing monitoring and future treatment options.
Hormone receptor profiling – understanding estrogen and progesterone receptor activity in excised tissue can help personalize decisions about adjuvant hormonal support.
Ready When You Are
Ready to start your evaluation?
Most centers stop after surgery. At Lotus, we continue looking for hidden drivers of recurrence or persistent pain, so treatment can be fine-tuned. This “post-op lens” is part of why our care is more complete, and why patients feel more secure after surgery.
Common Questions
What is endo belly?
“Endo belly” is the common term patients use for the severe bloating and abdominal swelling that can happen with endometriosis. It’s often described as a belly that looks or feels suddenly distended—sometimes within hours—and may come and go in waves, frequently worsening around a period but not always. Importantly, this can mimic weight gain even when the underlying issue is swelling, fluid shifts, or gastrointestinal distension rather than true fat gain.
Endometriosis can irritate tissues in the pelvis and abdomen and can also affect (or “talk to”) the bowel, which helps explain why many people notice constipation, diarrhea, cramping, or a tight, pressured abdomen alongside pelvic pain. You can have significant digestive symptoms even when routine GI testing looks normal, because endometriosis often involves the outer surface or deeper layers around the bowel rather than the inner lining.
If endo belly is a major part of your symptom pattern—especially when it comes with painful bowel movements, cyclical flares, or persistent pelvic pain—our team can help you sort out what’s driving it and what treatment options are most likely to bring relief. Explore our educational resources, and if you’re ready, reach out to schedule a consultation so we can review your history and build a plan around your goals.
How do I make the most of a short endometriosis appointment?
Go in with a one-page snapshot of your story so the limited time is spent on decision-making, not backtracking. The most helpful snapshot includes: your top 2–3 symptoms, the pattern (cyclical vs daily, triggers, where pain starts and spreads), what you’ve already tried and what happened, and what your symptoms keep you from doing (work, school, intimacy, exercise). If you have a history of “normal” scans, bring that too—because imaging can miss endometriosis, and the pattern of symptoms and prior response to treatment still matters.
Bring the right records if you have them—especially operative reports, pathology, and imaging reports (and ideally the actual images). Then decide your goal for the visit: diagnostic clarity, a plan to evaluate look-alike or coexisting conditions, or a clear surgical discussion (whether surgery is likely to help, anticipated scope, and what recovery may involve). If you want to make the appointment count even more, reach out to our team ahead of time so we can review what you’ve already done and tell you exactly what information would be most useful for a focused, productive conversation.
Can I keep working with endometriosis?
Yes—many people with endometriosis keep working, but it often requires a realistic plan around symptoms like pain, fatigue, brain fog, heavy bleeding, and unpredictable flares. Work becomes harder when endometriosis pain isn’t just “period pain,” but a complex, whole‑nervous‑system experience that can persist throughout the month and sometimes continues even after partial treatments. If your job performance is being affected, that’s not a personal failure—it’s a sign your symptoms need more targeted evaluation and a clearer strategy.
In our practice, we think about work in two parallel tracks: managing symptoms so you can function day to day, and treating the underlying disease when it’s driving ongoing inflammation, adhesions, or organ involvement. Depending on your situation, this may include a structured pain management approach (often multimodal) and, when appropriate, excision surgery planning based on a careful review of your history, imaging, and prior operative/pathology reports. If you’re wondering what’s realistic for you—whether that’s staying at work with accommodations, reducing hours temporarily, or planning time off for treatment—reach out to schedule a consultation so our team can review your records and help you map out next steps.
What questions should I ask an endometriosis specialist?
Come in focused on how your surgeon thinks and how your care will be mapped out. Helpful questions include: based on my symptoms and records, what diagnoses are you considering (endometriosis, adenomyosis, and common look‑alikes), and what makes you lean one way or another? Ask what additional records or imaging would meaningfully change the plan, and whether your imaging will be interpreted with endometriosis mapping in mind—not just a “normal/abnormal” read.
If surgery is on the table, ask for specifics about technique and scope: do you primarily perform excision (rather than superficial burning/ablation), and how do you confirm what was removed (photos, operative report detail, pathology)? Ask what areas you expect could be involved in your case (ovaries, bowel, bladder/ureters, diaphragm) and whether a multidisciplinary team is planned if those organs may be affected. It’s also reasonable to ask how they define surgical “success” for your goals—pain relief, bowel/bladder function, fertility—and how outcomes and recurrence/persistent symptoms are handled.
Finally, ask how the care process works from start to finish: what the pre‑op workup includes, what recovery typically looks like for the anticipated complexity, and how follow‑up is structured if symptoms don’t resolve fully. In our practice, we review records purposefully before meeting so the conversation is productive and realistic, and we’ll be direct about whether surgery seems likely to help or whether another path makes more sense. If you’d like, you can reach out to schedule a consultation and we’ll tell you exactly what to send first so we can make your visit worth your time.
Why do endometriosis doctors focus so much on fertility?
Many clinicians focus on fertility because endometriosis can affect it through several pathways—not just “blocked tubes.” Disease can distort pelvic anatomy with adhesions, create an inflammatory environment that interferes with fertilization and implantation, and sometimes impact ovarian reserve (especially when endometriomas are involved). Fertility is also time-sensitive, so teams often raise it early to avoid surprises and to help patients make decisions that still keep future options open.
That said, fertility should never be the only lens. Endometriosis is a whole-body, quality-of-life disease—pain, bowel and bladder symptoms, fatigue, painful sex, and missed work or school are valid reasons to pursue evaluation and treatment whether or not pregnancy is a goal. In our practice, we center the plan on what matters to you—symptom relief, long-term function, and, if relevant, a thoughtful fertility strategy that fits your timeline. If you’re feeling dismissed or “reduced to your uterus,” reach out to schedule a consultation so we can map out an individualized plan that treats you as a whole person.
Is endometriosis surgery only for fertility?
No—endometriosis surgery is not only for fertility. Excision surgery is often performed primarily to relieve pain and other symptoms, to restore normal anatomy when disease has scarred or “frozen” the pelvis, and to address endometriosis affecting organs like the bowel, bladder, ureters, or diaphragm. Surgery can also be the most definitive way to confirm the diagnosis, because endometriosis isn’t always visible on imaging.
Fertility can be an important goal, but it’s just one possible indication—and it’s not always the reason to operate. For example, removing an ovarian endometrioma before IVF is no longer considered “routine” unless there’s a clear reason such as severe pain, concerning imaging features, or a practical barrier to safe egg retrieval. In our practice, we focus on tailoring excision to what problem we’re trying to solve in your body—symptom relief, organ safety/function, diagnosis, fertility goals, or a combination—so you can make a decision that fits your timeline and priorities. If you’re unsure whether surgery makes sense in your situation, you can reach out to schedule a consultation with our team to review your symptoms, imaging, and goals and map out an individualized plan.

